Now, first of all... this is NOT from my infamous foul fest fifth graders!

How do we sort this out?

From the youTube summary about the play:

Quote:

Etzella Ettelbrück player Justice Sueing commits an unsportmanlike foul on T71 Dudelange player Chris Martin, just a second after a technical foul is called on the coach Carsten Steiner by the referee.

I don't think the sound is matched to the video.
Don't hear a whistle for the original technical on the coach.
If you are calling that technical, are you deeming the ball to be dead at that point?
How would you sort for live ball foul on shooter?
How would you sort for dead ball contact?

Assuming that the T was on the defensive coach, the ball remains live and the correct call is an intentional personal foul. Shoot 2 free throws for the T, then 3 free throws for the intentional, then ball back to the offense on the sideline.

If the T was against the offensive coach, then the ball does become dead immediately. However, the contact is so excessive that I believe an intentional technical foul would be warranted. So 2 shots to the defensive team for the coach's T, then 2 shots to the offensive team for the intentional T, then the ball goes to the offensive team at midcourt opposite the table.

Doesn't matter if the ball is dead or not, an intentional, technical or disqualifying fouls are allways reported no matter of the status of the ball.
If the T is on offensive coach then we have 2 FT for defense, then 3 FT for offense then a throw-in opposite table for offensive team.
If the T is on the defensive coach we first have 2 shoots by any player, then 3 3 by the player who got fouled and then throw-in opposite the table.

If the T is on offensive coach then we have 2 FT for defense, then 3 FT for offense then a throw-in opposite table for offensive team.

I'm not familiar with FIBA rules, so could you explain why you'd have 3 free throws on a dead ball foul? Or maybe you're saying that the ball would not be dead? But I don't see how that could be. . . I'm not doubting you at all, I just am curious about the rationale for it. Thanks.

Now, first of all... this is NOT from my infamous foul fest fifth graders!

How do we sort this out?

From the youTube summary about the play:

I don't think the sound is matched to the video.
Don't hear a whistle for the original technical on the coach.
If you are calling that technical, are you deeming the ball to be dead at that point?
How would you sort for live ball foul on shooter?
How would you sort for dead ball contact?

I have an T on the head coach regardless of whether his team is on O or D. I have a flagrant technical and ejection on dark jersey player for his action.
Two free throws lane cleared penalizing the T.
Two free throws lane cleared for white jersey shooter.
Ball OOB to white sideline opposite table.

I have an T on the head coach regardless of whether his team is on O or D. I have a flagrant technical and ejection on dark jersey player for his action.
Two free throws lane cleared penalizing the T.
Two free throws lane cleared for white jersey shooter.
Ball OOB to white sideline opposite table.

I disagree with the flagrant technical. Yes it was a hard foul, but I don't think it warrants an ejection and 1 game suspension (at least here in MA). No doubt the contact was excessive, and that's why I'd stick with an intentional technical/personal. Based on the footage, it looks like the defender made an attempt at the ball (he jumped with his arms outstretched). If he wanted to be malicious, he wouldn't have jumped and just could've undercut the shooter, or else would've gone shoulder-first towards the shooter like a football block. The only way I'd have flagrant is if these 2 teams were jarring with each other all night and maybe there were a couple of hard fouls previously, or if there's a bad history in the rivalry of these 2 schools.